North Carolina has more trouble putting food on the table than most other states, according to a nonprofit anti-hunger organization.

A report from the Food Research and Action Center shows 17 percent of North Carolinians face food insecurity, making the state the 13th worst in the country.

Among the most troubled areas in North Carolina is Greensboro, where one in five people go hungry, according to the report. That's an improvement from one in four a couple years ago, but still higher than the national average. One in six Americans faces food hardship.

The report's author Randy Rosso said state nutrition programs, like SNAP, have only middling success. Common barriers include benefit office hours, locations and heavy case loads.

"In North Carolina, barely half the eligible kids are getting free or reduced price school breakfast," Rosso said. "And only 16 percent of eligible kids are getting meals during the summer through the summer food service program."

Still, Rosso said the state's hunger rate is improving since the recession.

"We know that if the economy continues to improve and North Carolina works to increase wages and create jobs, then hunger and food hardship will go down," he said.

For King, this is the solution to food insecurity. He is the executive director of Vision Tree Community Development Corporation, a nonprofit that helps Greensboro residents get food to their doorstep with mobile food markets. He said the basic idea of connecting urban farmers to local consumers can be applied anywhere in the world, but Greensboro needs it more than ever.

Child hunger is the target of a collaboration between Triangle-based farmers' markets and nonprofit Farmer Foodshare. Food and money will be collected this week at markets in Raleigh, Durham, Chapel Hill, Carrboro and elsewhere. Margaret Gifford is the founder and executive director of Farmer Foodshare. She says there's plenty of food to go around in North Carolina.